Killer Tsunami in Greenland Possibly Triggered by Landslide

Four people are missing and nearly a dozen homes were flooded after a rare tsunami struck the west coast of Greenland on Saturday. Initial reports attributed the giant wave to a magnitude four earthquake, but speculation is emerging that the highly-localized tsunami was actually produced by a massive landslide.

The tsunami,
which struck on Saturday evening
, has left two people seriously injured, many homes damaged, and a small, isolated community in shock. "It's hard to believe what happened last night," noted Greenland's Prime Minister Kim Kielsen in a Facebook post. "After the earthquake in Nuugaatsiaq we were made aware that the forces of nature can suddenly change...what happened is tragic and my thoughts are with everyone from Nuugaatsiaq."

A video captured by Olina Angie K. Nielsen shows the panicked moment when the wave hit the village. In classic tsunami fashion, the ocean appears to move inland, flooding dwellings and damaging structures, and then receding back into the ocean. Helicopters and medical staff were dispatched to the village, and some 39 residents have been evacuated. At least four people are missing, but concerns of aftershocks have delayed attempts to recover the bodies.

Initially, the tsunami was attributed to a magnitude four earthquake, but as geologist Dave Petley
points out
at the Landslide Blog, the large-but highly isolated-tsunami may have been caused by a landslide:

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It appears that the local seismological bureau recorded the event as a magnitude 4.0 earthquake, with the tsunami striking a few minutes later. Greenland is not a particularly seismically-active area, and as far as I can tell this earthquake has not been recorded more widely. This, combined with the localised nature of the tsunami, suggest that the cause is most likely to have been a very large landslide, either from the fjord walls or under the water (or maybe both).

Peter Voss, a geologist with the National Geological Surveys for Denmark and Greenland (GEUS),
told
the Greenland Broadcasting Corporation that his team detected a signal suggestive of an earthquake, but that a landslide can't be ruled out. He theorizes that a major slope from a mountain triggered the waves. "The slump has made a large part of the mountain collapse into the fjord and has created this wave," he told GBC.

Allison Bent, a seismologist with Natural Resources Canada,
told the CBC
that, "Based on the magnitude, we suspect it wasn't the earthquake itself that triggered the tsunami, but in all likelihood, the earthquake triggered an underwater landslide, and that is what triggered the tsunami," she said.

"For the most part, Greenland is not a very seismically active area," he told Gizmodo. "Its geology is composed primarily of old, metamorphic rocks and as far as I know is typically very stable (compared to, say, Iceland). Earthquakes in Baffin Bay (off the coast of NW Greenland) are quite rare, and it isn't a region known to have tsunami warning systems anywhere. So this would likely have come as a rather large surprise to anyone there. From initial reports it seems very plausible it was caused by a landslide (either into the water somewhere in the fjord, or subsurface under the water), but I really don't know without any data."

The recent disaster is a reminder that Greenland is not immune to tsunamis. Back in 2000, a tsunami slammed into Disco Bay, also on Greenland's west coast.